Style Weekly - Richmond, VA local news, arts, and events., Style Weeklyhttps://www.styleweekly.com
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Style Weekly - Richmond, VA local news, arts, and events., Style WeeklyStyle Weekly is your alternative for RVA news, arts, events, restaurant reviews and classifieds.https://www.styleweekly.com/imager/b/bigsquare/808579/f6dc/adminIcon_styleWkly.jpg200200A Rum for Your Moneyhttps://www.styleweekly.com/ShortOrderBlog/archives/2018/05/23/a-rum-for-your-money
https://www.styleweekly.com/ShortOrderBlog/archives/2018/05/23/a-rum-for-your-moneyLaura Ingles
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9081190/jasper2web_1_.jpg" width="1444" height="964" />
Barry, Brad and Bart Haneberg love a good cocktail. After months of tinkering and tasting, the three brothers and owners of Virago Spirits are nearly ready to release their first blend. A mix of rums from Barbados, Jamaica, Nicaragua and Panama, the Four Port Rum is a little spicy with some sweetness, and smooth enough to drink neat or on the rocks.
It’s not on shelves quite yet, but a crowd of industry folks and media got to sample the rum at a Monday evening tasting event at the Jasper.</p>
<p>“We wanted something that was strong enough, funky enough and bold enough to stand up in a cocktail, but that would also be a good sipper,” Barry Haneberg says.</p>
<p>A rum fermented and distilled from scratch at Virago’s production facility in Scott’s Addition is on the horizon, but Haneberg says he and his brothers wanted to offer something a little different by starting off with a blended product.</p>
<p>“Most rums are coming from a single distillery,” he says. “With spirits you have to master fermentation, distilling, aging and blending, and by blending we’re able to kind of show off that portion of the art.”</p>
<p>Haneberg describes Four Port as a combination of two styles: British and Spanish. British rums are “a little funkier and spicier,” while Spanish rums “tend to be softer, sweeter, mellower on the palate.” The team went through about a dozen variations before settling on this blend, spending hours mixing and sampling at what he refers to as a barrel library.</p>
<p>“Sometimes you don’t know what you want until you find it,” he says. “And there was an element of that.”</p>
<p>At the tasting event on Monday, the guys behind the bar served up three cocktails featuring Four Port: an old-fashioned poured over a giant ice cube imprinted with the Jasper’s logo, a palmetto featuring rum, sweet vermouth and bitters in a martini glass, and a not-too-sweet daiquiri made of rum, lime juice and simple syrup.</p>
<p>Haneberg’s favorite is the daiquiri, which he recommends for anyone who’s new to rum. Four Port makes for a great whiskey stand-in, though, so for anyone who’s partial to the bite of bourbon, he suggests going for the old-fashioned.</p>
We’re still a few months from the grand opening of the tasting room — Haneberg says they’re aiming for September — but Four Port will be available by special order at ABC stores July 1. There are a couple more legal hoops to jump through before it’s on the shelves, but keep an eye out for the rum blend at local bars in the coming weeks.</p>
<p>And as if that’s not enough to look forward to, the Hanebergs also plan to make gin, brandy, herbal spirits and liqueurs.</p>
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Wed, 23 May 2018 16:45:00 -0400Style WeeklyIncompatible Heavy Metalhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/incompatible-heavy-metal/Content?oid=9079425
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/incompatible-heavy-metal/Content?oid=9079425Edwin Slipek
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The “Jetsons”-like Pulse stop in front of exquisite Hunton Hall should be moved.
<p>Lighting? Check.
<p>Bike racks? Check.
<p>Americans with Disabilities Act requirements? Check.
<p>Signs? Check.
<p>“Plant palette”? Check.
<p>Effect on historic properties? ... Hello. … Hello? … Is anybody there?
<p>With less than a month until the announced June 24 launch of the $65 million Pulse rapid bus system, pedestrians and motorists are coming to grips with new traffic lanes, turn patterns and 28 aggressively modernistic concrete, steel and brick transit stations now set along the 7.6- mile route.
With Rocketts Landing and Willow Lawn serving as the bus system’s bookends, these open-air platforms, with dramatic, one size fits all, “Jetsons”-like slanted metal roofs, have altered the cityscape and the appearance of their immediate environs.
<p>At certain points, such as at Cleveland Street in Scott’s Addition, the innocuous stretch of 20th century suburban commercial culture is animated not unattractively by the station’s bombastic design. In fact, since the former warehouse and industrial buildings in Scott’s Addition are so uniformly low-slung and numbingly similar, the Pulse stop offers a welcome shot of architectural adrenalin.
<p>But what works along that aesthetically underwhelming stretch of West Broad is sadly incompatible at a number of other stations being readied downtown. While the in-your-face station design works just fine in front of City Hall, a bold structure that overwhelms everything between Ninth and 10th streets, the Pulse station in front of the Virginia Commonwealth University police station at 224 W. Broad, a former savings and loan building designed in 1964, by Cunneen Co., is an affront to the modest-scaled building with well-detailed white marble and distinctive black glass fenestration.
<p>Similarly unfortunate, at the 12th Street station on the south side of Broad just east of Governor Street, the shelter is plopped smack in front of a Virginia Department of Transportation building. This dignified, recently-restored three-story building in the English renaissance style, was opened as Memorial Hospital in 1900 and would be recognized as the jewel it is were it not for the dazzling array of architecturally-distinctive National Historic Landmarks nearby. These include Monumental Church, Old City Hall, First African Baptist Church and the Capitol.
<p>And this brings us to another vaunted landmark on Broad affected for the worse by the Pulse, the former First Baptist Church. This 1841 gem was intelligently re-purposed in 2007 as a Virginia Commonwealth University student commons building.
Until a generic Pulse station was unceremoniously dropped on the sidewalk smack in front of its 177-year-old cast-iron and granite gate, steep front steps and classical portico, the Greek revival structure preened from the knob of Shockoe Hill and the terminus of meandering Governor’s Street.
<p>That an iconic, modernist and incompatible Pulse station was plopped in front of this nationally-listed historic building is a travesty. How did it happen?
<p>This isn’t the first time that Hunton Hall has been assaulted. In 1975, VCU sought to demolish the building so that Sanger Hall could be expanded eastward (at the time the outer walls of the high rise were faced with small ceramic tiles in a shade of bright blue more appropriate for public restrooms than a medical campus). But the public outcry, which included pleas from the prestigious National Trust for Historic Preservation, was loud and clear: Don’t tear it down. </p>
<p>Consider. The church’s architect was Thomas U. Walter, a man exalted as the dean of American architects during his storied career. His classical revival buildings defined Philadelphia for decades. He was also a founder of the American Institute of Architects. But most importantly, Walter designed our nation’s Capitol as we know it today -- the soaring dome and Senate and House of Representatives chambers.</p>
<p>Of course, in Richmond we are more impressed by local connections. First Baptist was built in Court End by a Baptist congregation that had been established in 1780. Its 1841 sanctuary, with colossal, fluted and deep-set Doric columns, later inspired the designs of at least three other Baptist churches here. These included First African Baptist Church (two blocks away on College Street) and Fourth Baptist Church at 2800 P St. on Church Hill. And in 1927, when the First Baptist congregation moved to its new complex at Monument and the Boulevard, it brought Walter’s design along with it, albeit enlarged and in red brick.
<p>Soon after the congregation’s move to the Fan District, the Medical College of Virginia bought the old sanctuary and put to various uses, including the popular Campus Room restaurant in the basement. In 2007 the university oversaw a sensitive and state-of-the-art conversion of the old church into a student commons. Einhorn Yaffee Prescott of Washington was architect.
<p>So how did this architecturally incompatible Pulse station get plopped here?
<p>The BRT Final Station Location Report, which is available online, states that the station serving westward buses was proposed originally for a Broad Street location just east of 12th Street. Instead, after discussions with the Virginia Department of General Services, VCU and Richmond officials, it was determined that the station be moved “just east of the intersection of 11th Street.” This would have placed the station adjacent to Sanger Hall. It would also have done little to spoil the historic and aesthetic aspects of town. The map published in the report clearly indicates the station closer to 11th Street and west of Hunton Hall, though barely.
It is distressing that the Pulse station somehow ended up where it is, trashing one of our city’s most important pieces of architecture, a remarkably beautiful edifice and a smartly re-purposed building.
<p>Who was asleep at the wheel? To paraphrase Ricky Ricardo in admonishing Lucy, “there is some explaining to do.”
<p>The station should be moved.
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Wed, 23 May 2018 15:20:00 -0400Style WeeklyTwenty-One African-American Physicians Recognized on Bon Secours Legacy Wallhttps://www.styleweekly.com/Studi/archives/2018/05/22/twenty-one-african-american-physicians-recognized-on-bon-secours-legacy-wall
https://www.styleweekly.com/Studi/archives/2018/05/22/twenty-one-african-american-physicians-recognized-on-bon-secours-legacy-wallStaff
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<p>On May 11, Bon Secours Richmond Community Hospital revealed a newly created Legacy Wall of outdoor art made by local muralist Hamilton Glass and alumni from the non-profit Art 180.
<p>The murals recognize 21 notable African-American physicians who founded Richmond Community Hospital.
<p>Richmond Community Hospital dates back to the early 1900s and is credited with "descending from the first African-American patient care facility in Virginia," according to a press release.
<p>You can visit the wall outside the Bon Secours Sarah Garland Jones Center located at 2600 Nine Mile Rd.
<p>If you want to know more about these community heroes featured on the wall, a recent press release from Bon Secours had more bio information. Read on.
<p><blockquote>Bon Secours Richmond Community Hospital: Twenty Physicians Biographies</p>
<p>1. Walton Belle: General Surgeon
<p>Dr. Walton Belle received his undergraduate degree from Virginia Union University before enlisting in the U.S. Army in the early 1950s. He returned to attend Meharry Medical College, where he completed his medical degree and General Surgery training. Dr. Belle served as both Chief of Staff and Chief of Surgery at Richmond Community Hospital. He contributed funds to cover the initial operating budget of the new hospital building within the Church Hill district. Once construction was complete, Dr. Belle’s knowledge of Public Health Services was instrumental in setting up the new facility.
<p>2. Lillie Bennett: Pediatrics
<p>Dr. Lillie Bennett is a native Richmonder and leading Pediatrician in Richmond. She completed her undergraduate degree at Virginia Union University and her medical degree at Meharry Medical College. She finished her residency in Pediatrics at Harlem Hospital. She was part of the medical staff at Richmond Community Hospital when a new, more advanced, facility was being proposed. Although the plans did not include an Obstetrics or Pediatrics ward, Dr. Bennett’s belief in supporting the community and its Black physicians was so strong, she contributed funds to make this facility a reality.
<p>3. Elwood Boone: Urology
<p>Dr. Elwood Boone completed his undergraduate degree at Colgate University and, with his brother Lewis, attended Meharry College of Medicine, where he graduated with his medical degree. Moving to the Medical College of Virginia (MCV), Dr. Boone trained in both Urology and Surgery. Dr. Boone was part of the medical staff at Richmond Community Hospital when construction of a new facility in the Church Hill district was being discussed. He supported that decision, citing the need for an updated facility where Black physicians could practice first-class medicine, work with their colleagues on a daily basis, and stand as a source of pride for the community.
4. Lewis Boone: Ob-Gyn
Dr. Lewis Boone earned his medical degree, along with his brother Elwood, from Meharry College of Medicine. He then went to the Medical College of Virginia (MCV), where he specialized in Obstetrics and Gynecology. He later joined the staff at Richmond Community Hospital. Though plans for the new hospital facility did not include an Obstetrics ward, a Gynecology department was proposed to take care of local women’s needs. Dr. Boone financial contribution to the new building helped cover a shortage in its initial operating budget.
<p>5. Theodore R. Coots Brown: Family Practice
<p>Dr. Theodore Coots Brown earned his undergraduate degree at Virginia Union University and later moved to Howard University’s College of Medicine to complete his medical degree. Dr. Brown donated not only his expertise, but financial resources towards the
construction of the new hospital facility, ensuring its continuing legacy within the community.
<p>6. James Campbell: Radiologist
<p>Originally from Guyama, South America, Dr. James Campbell moved to the United States to complete his undergraduate degree at Oakwood University in Huntsville, AL. He received his medical degree at Howard University’s College of Medicine. He continued his medical training at Nassau County Medical Center. Both Dr. Campbell and his wife, Dr. Joyce Whitaker, contributed funds to support the new building project, thereby ensuring its continuing presence within the community.
<p>7. Wesley Carter: Psychiatry
<p>Dr. Wesley Carter was born at Richmond Community Hospital. He earned his undergraduate degree at Virginia Union University and his medical degree at the Medical College of Virginia (MCV). While practicing in Richmond, he joined the Richmond Medical Society, serving as its president for four years. Dr. Carter was enthusiastic about the plan to build a new facility for Richmond Community Hospital and provided a portion of the support needed to keep the project alive.
<p>8. Harry Crawford: General Surgery
<p>Dr. Harry Crawford earned his undergraduate degree from Virginia Union University before attending Meharry Medical School and Howard University’s School of Medicine, training as a General Surgeon. Being such an ardent advocate of the community, Dr. Crawford contributed funds to help cover the shortage in the initial operating budget helping make Richmond Community Hospital’s new Church Hill facility a reality.
<p>9. Halstead Howell: General Surgery
<p>Dr. Halstead Howell earned his undergraduate degree at Oakwood University and received his medical degree from Howard University’s College of Medicine. He joined the staff at Richmond Community Hospital and served on many committees in Bon Secours Richmond Health System. Until his retirement, Dr. Howell taught as a Clinical Associate Professor of Surgery at Virginia Commonwealth University (formerly MCV). He pledged his financial support to assist with the initial operating costs for the new facility in Church Hill.
<p>10. John Howlette: Optometry
<p>Dr. John Howlette received his undergraduate degree at Virginia Union University and studied for his medical degree at Howard University’s College of Medicine. He completed his training with a residency in Optometry from the Illinois College of Optometry. Dr. Howlette was the first African-American optometrist in Richmond, establishing his practice in the Jackson Ward district in 1952.
<p>11. Reginald Jackson: Radiologist
<p>Dr. Reginald Jackson’s family has a long history in Richmond’s medical community; his father, Dr. Isaiah Jackson, was one of the original founders of Richmond Community Hospital; and his son, Dr. Richard Jackson, is part of the current medical staff. Dr. Reginald Jackson received his medical degree from Howard University’s College of Medicine and
RCH Physicians and specialized in Radiology at Homer G. Philips Hospital. He later became Chief of the Radiology department at Richmond Community Hospital. Dr. Reginald Jakcson is recognized as one of the leading proponents of the proposal to construct a new facility for Richmond Community Hospital at its current Church Hill location.
<p>12. Wiley and Bernice Latham: Gastroenterology and Family Practice
<p>Drs. Wiley and Bernice Latham met while studying for their medical degree at Meharry Medical College. They interned at the Medical College of Virginia (MCV), where he studied Internal Medicine and she focused on Family Practice. They completed their residencies at Howard University’s College of Medicine, where Wiley finished his fellowship in Gastroenterology. Dr. Wiley Latham became the first African-American gastroenterologist practicing in Richmond. Both doctors were part of the medical staff at Richmond Community Hospital when they learned of the proposal for a new hospital. They contributed funds when the project’s initial operating budget came up short.
<p>13. Frank Royal: Family Practitioner
<p>Dr. Frank Royal trained as a Family Practitioner at Meharry Medical College. An eloquent speaker, Dr. Royal convinced the members of the Hospital Corporation of American (HCA) that a new facility was needed in Richmond’s East End. Even after the completion of Richmond Community Hospital’s new building, Dr. Royal partnered with Dr. Walton Belle to create an ICU department for the facility. He also encouraged the hospital’s eventual partnership with the Bon Secours Health System in 1995.
14. Harry Royal: Ob-Gyn
Dr. Harry Royal entered Meharry Medical College two years before his twin brother, Frank. Dr. Royal also attended Temple University to specialize in Obstetrics and Gynecology. He was a member of the medical staff at Richmond Community Hospital when the new hospital facility in the Church Hill district was proposed. Dr. Royal contributed funds to help cover the initial operating costs for the new facility.
<p>15. Lindley Smith: Ophthalmology
<p>Dr. Lindley Smith received his undergraduate degree from Long Island University. He attended Meharry Medical College and graduated with his medical degree. He later trained in Ophthalmology at Letterman Army Medical Center. Dr. Smith remembers moving to Richmond at a time when there were no Black Ophthalmologists practicing in the city and felt that the Black community needed a representative in that discipline. He respects Richmond Community Hospital for its age, its history, and its tradition of caring for those less fortunate, and felt honored to carry on the legacy of that institution.
<p>16. Charles Sutton: Family Practice
<p>Dr. Charles Sutton received his undergraduate degree from Virginia Union University and earned his medical degree at Howard University’s College of Medicine; his internship and residency were spent at the District of Columbia General Hospital, where Dr. Sutton specialized in Family Practice. He served on the medical staff of many hospitals within the area, including Richmond Community Hospital. Dr. Sutton believed in the importance of having medical institutions owned and controlled by the community, as this would assure the
RCH Physicians highest standards of health care for Black patients. When informed that the original bank loan would not cover the initial operating costs of the new building for Richmond Community Hospital, Dr. Sutton guaranteed to cover any outstanding gaps within the budget.
<p>17. Valvin Sutton: Internal Medicine
<p>Dr. Valvin Sutton received his undergraduate degree from Virginia Union University and completed his medical degree at Howard University’s College of Medicine. He remained at Howard to finish his residency in Internal Medicine. Dr. Valvin Sutton established his practice within the same office building as his uncle, Dr. Charles Sutton and became a member of the medical staff at Richmond Community Hospital. He said his motivation for supporting the new building project for Richmond Community Hospital was to follow his uncle’s lead. He understood the necessity of having community-owned institutions to assure the highest standards of medical healthcare within the Black community.
<p>18. William Thornton: Podiatry
<p>Dr. William Thornton received his undergraduate degree from Virginia Union University and completed his medical degree and residency at the Ohio College of Podiatry. He was co- chair of the Legislative Committee of the Richmond Medical Society, as well as president of the Podiatry Society of Virginia. He contributed funds to Richmond Community Hospital’s new building project because he believed the community would be strengthened by having an outstanding hospital facility supported by a professional medical staff.
<p>19. Joyce Whitaker: Pediatrics
<p>Dr. Joyce Whitaker earned her undergraduate degree from Virginia Union University and received her medical degree from Howard University’s College of Medicine. Dr. Whitaker completed her internship and residency at the Nassau County Medical Center. Both Drs. Whitaker and her husband, Dr. James Campbell were part of the medical staff at Richmond Community Hospital when the proposed new building’s budget fell short. Dr. Whitaker felt motivated to support the project financially in part because she had been born, reared, and educated within the Church Hill district.
<p>20. Everett White: Family Practitioner
<p>Dr. Everett White received his undergraduate degree from Virginia Union University and completed his medical degree at Howard University’s College of Medicine. Dr. White opened a private practice in Richmond, specializing in Family Practice. His commitment to the community endured throughout his career; he served as President of the Richmond Medical Society, Secretary of the medical staff of Richmond Community Hospital, and as member of both the Richmond Tuberculosis Association and the Richmond Infantile Paralysis Association. Dr. White contributed funds to help cover the outstanding balance of funds needed for the creation of Richmond Community Hospital’s new facility.
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Tue, 22 May 2018 14:45:00 -0400Style WeeklyFamily Members View Body Camera Footage of Marcus Peters’ Deathhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/family-members-view-body-camera-footage-of-marcus-peters-death/Content?oid=9077419
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/family-members-view-body-camera-footage-of-marcus-peters-death/Content?oid=9077419Laura Ingles
<img src="https://media1.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9077420/14544.jpeg" width="2048" height="1612" />
Nine days after Marcus Peters died, his sister and uncle watch the video from the body camera on the police officer who shot him. Just after noon today, Princess Blanding and Jeffrey Peters emerge from the Richmond Police Department downtown and address a small group of reporters.</p>
<p>“I’m going to reiterate what I said before. My stance remains exactly as it was initially,” says Blanding, Peters’ older sister and vice principal at Essex High School, where he worked. “Marcus was unarmed, Marcus was clearly in need of help, he was in distress, and he should have received help, not death.”</p>
<p>Peters, a 24-year-old biology teacher, was reportedly on his way to the Jefferson Hotel where he worked as a part-time security guard, when he lost control of his car and struck two other vehicles at West Franklin and Belvidere streets.</p> Witnesses say they saw him dancing and behaving erratically, while fully naked, around the interstate. Officer Michael Nyantakyi shot Peters, who died of gunshot wounds to the abdomen. Peters was unarmed.</p>
<p>While other family members chose not to view the footage, Blanding decided early on that she needed to see it for herself in order to move forward and help overhaul the system, a promise she says she made to her brother as he was buried.</p>
<p>“I came here because in order for me to continue to fight I needed to get as many pieces of the puzzle as I can, and seeing exactly what took place is a huge part of it,” Blanding says. “It makes it hard for me even to speak and continue to speak when I don’t have those pieces. I believe knowledge is power and I have received more knowledge, and I am going to continue to push forward with my power to fight for Marcus and to fight for reformation.”</p>
<p>According to the family’s lawyer, Jonathan Halperin, it’s clear from the footage that Nyantakyi knew that Peters was in crisis.</p>
<p>“There’s no question that Marcus was having a mental health episode,” Halperin says. “The officer recognized that. The issue is, what should have been done from the moment of recognition forward? And that’s what we’re going to investigate.”</p>
<p>Since Peters’ death, Blanding has been the steady, composed, vocal point person for the family. She says she and her large extended family (Peters was one of 12 children, with “too many cousins to count”) want justice. Not just for her brother, but for everyone who encounters law enforcement, and for the system as a whole. Blanding says Peters, who had no known history of mental health or drug-related issues, should have received compassion and help instead of a bullet. As she grieves the loss of her brother, she says she wants to work with police and see an improvement in trainings and methods for handling situations with people in distress.</p>
<p>According to Richmond Police Department spokesman James Mercante, the video will be released to the public now that the family has had a chance to view it privately. He did not say when that will be.</p>
<p>“It’s very hard for us to watch it, and it is hard to know that it’s going to be out there in the public,” Blanding says. “But there’s a lot of people who truly care, who want to know what happened or why did the officer feel justified in what he did. I don’t feel that it was justification, however, it may be insightful to some to just figure out: ‘OK, what happened to my brother who had the world in his hands, and it was all taken away.’”</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest OB/GYNhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-ob-gyn/BestOf?oid=9037136
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-ob-gyn/BestOf?oid=9037136
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9037135/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Dr. Lisa West</h3>
<p><em>3738 Winterfield Road, No. 100<br>
378-9378<br>
westgyn.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Virginia Women's Center</p>
<p><strong>Third Place: </strong>Virginia Physicians for Women</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Lawyerhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-lawyer/BestOf?oid=9037133
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-lawyer/BestOf?oid=9037133
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9037132/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Allen, Allen, Allen & Allen</h3>
<p><em>Various locations<br>
353-1200<br>
allenandallen.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Michael LaFratta</p>
<p><strong>Third Place:</strong> Marks & Harrison</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Independent Bookstorehttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-independent-bookstore/BestOf?oid=9037131
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-independent-bookstore/BestOf?oid=9037131
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9037130/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place:Chop Suey Books (Hall of Fame Winner) and Fountain Bookstore</h3>
<p>Chop Suey Books<br>
<em>2913 W. Cary St. <br>
422-8066<br>
chopsueybooks.com</em></p>
<p>Fountain Bookstore<br>
<em>1312 E. Cary St. <br>
788-1594<br>
fountainbookstore.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Black Swan Books</p>
<p><strong>Third Place:</strong> The Little Bookshop</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Massage Therapyhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-massage-therapy/BestOf?oid=9037129
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-massage-therapy/BestOf?oid=9037129
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9037128/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Erin's Healing Hands</h3>
<p><em>6767 Forest Hill Ave.<br>
901-2181<br>
erinshealinghands.amtamembers.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Carytown Massage AND Back in Action</p>
<p><strong>Third Place:</strong> Club West Med Spa</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style Weekly2018 Best of Richmondhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/2018-best-of-richmond/Content?oid=9014293
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/2018-best-of-richmond/Content?oid=9014293Brent Baldwin, Laura Ingles, Karen Newton and Jason Roop
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014291/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
You voted, and voted, and voted. And after much tabulation and tribulation, the winners have emerged.
<p>It's that time of year again. </p>
<p>It's time when you folks out there vote on our readers' picks for the year, naming your favorites across a host of categories including goods and services, people and places, arts and culture, and nightlife and dining. This year there were more than 85,000 votes cast from more than 45,000 people. And we counted them all. </p>
<p>On some readers' pick categories you'll see a Hall of Fame icon that denotes a winner who has dominated the category in years past, so we've given it a special designation right alongside this year's first-place winner. We've added new categories, lost some old ones and also tossed some editorial picks into the mix this year — some a little quirky and others not so much. </p>
<p>I would be remiss if I didn't remind readers: This issue really needs your votes! It's so easy to do, especially if you share on social media. And if you see a category that you'd like to see added to the mix next year, email us and let us know.</p>
<p>Now, without further adieu, here is your Best of Richmond issue, 2018. </p>
<p>Please hold your applause until you've finished reading. </p>
<hr>
<h3>Best of Richmond Categories</h3>
<p><strong><a href="https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-place-to-buy-a-cast-iron-skillet/BestOf?oid=8970260">Goods and Services</a></strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-new-hang-with-a-view/BestOf?oid=9013814">Nightlife</a></strong></p>
<p><a href="https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-revivalist-couple/BestOf?oid=9013535"><strong>People and Places</strong></a></p>
<p><strong><a href="https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-patio-to-kick-it/BestOf?oid=8972214">Food and Drink</a></strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-documentary-subject/BestOf?oid=9013212">Arts, Culture and Entertainment</a></strong></p>
<hr>
<p><em>Survey Methodology: The 2018 Style Weekly Readers' Poll was open to anyone with access to the Internet, and promoted through Style, word of mouth and various outlets. Entries were restricted to voters who registered online, meaning that participants could vote in categories only once per account. Thousands of ballots were cast anonymously between Feb. 1 and March 15. Style reserved the right to discard votes for winners in inappropriate categories. Style advertising staff had no access to survey results until they were tabulated and finalized by editorial staff. Profiles of the winners were written entirely by editorial staff and not seen by advertising staff until publication.</em><br>
</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Place for an Adult to Play With Kids' Toys Around Adult Beverageshttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-place-for-an-adult-to-play-with-kids-toys-around-adult-beverages/BestOf?oid=9014289
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-place-for-an-adult-to-play-with-kids-toys-around-adult-beverages/BestOf?oid=9014289
<h3>First Place: The Circuit Arcade Bar</h3>
<p><em>3121 W. Leigh St. <br>
thecircuitarcadebar.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Dave and Buster's</p>
<p><strong>Third Place:</strong> Hardywood Park Craft Brewery AND Buskey Cider</p>
Best of Richmond/Nightlife
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Karaokehttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-karaoke/BestOf?oid=9014288
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-karaoke/BestOf?oid=9014288
<img src="https://media1.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014287/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Cary Street Café</h3>
<p><em>2631 W. Cary St.<br>
353-7445<br>
carystreetcafe.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place:</strong> Bandito's Burrito Lounge</p>
<p><strong>Third Place: </strong>Baja Bean Co.<br>
</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Place to Play Triviahttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-place-to-play-trivia/BestOf?oid=9014156
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-place-to-play-trivia/BestOf?oid=9014156
<img src="https://media1.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014155/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: New York Deli</h3>
<p><em>2920 W. Cary St. <br>
358-3354<br>
ny-d.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place:</strong> Castleburg Brewery and Taproom</p>
<p><strong>Third Place:</strong> City Dogs</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest spot for a first datehttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-spot-for-a-first-date/BestOf?oid=9014154
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-spot-for-a-first-date/BestOf?oid=9014154
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014153/best_of_nightlife_bowling.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>River City Roll </h3>
<p><em>939 Myers St. <br>
331-0416<br>
rivercityroll.com</em></p>
<p>Listen, we love Richmond's food and drink scene just as much as the next person. But if you're a swipe-app-carrying member of the singles club, you can only go on so many first dates before the idea of staring across the table at another stranger while you chew slightly overpriced appetizers makes you go a little cross-eyed. </p>
<p>Unless you and your Bumble match hit it off instantly and just can't get enough of each other from that first handshake — no wait, should we hug? — there's bound to be an awkward moment or two, a lull in conversation, an uncomfortable glance around the bar as you desperately search for the next conversation topic. </p>
<p>Enter River City Roll, the boutique bowling alley that made its debut in Scott's Addition in April. Engaging in an activity relieves some of the pressure to be a witty conversationalist, and if nothing else, you can talk and laugh about how embarrassing that gutter ball was. There's even shuffleboard and skee-ball to keep you entertained while you wait for a lane, not to mention a full bar and a dinner menu. </p>
<p>Twenty lanes are available for bowling, each equipped with oversized leather couches for lounging between rounds, plus TVs with individual controls. Servers meander from lane to lane, taking bar and kitchen orders and even swiping cards right there on the spot. An hour of bowling costs $25, and everything on the menu is less than $15, so splitting the check (c'mon, it's 2018) shouldn't be too painful for either of you. </p>
<p>As for the food? The menu includes a selection of flatbreads and pizzas, plus shareable small plates like truffle fries and carrot hummus. And hey, regardless of what you order, if you do go in for a round of bowling, you'll both be up and moving around so much that you won't have to stare at each other while you chew. <br>
</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Taxi, Shuttle or Ride-hailing Servicehttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-taxi-shuttle-or-ride-hailing-service/BestOf?oid=9014151
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-taxi-shuttle-or-ride-hailing-service/BestOf?oid=9014151
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014150/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Uber</h3>
<p><em>uber.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Cap Trail Bike Shuttle</p>
<p><strong>Third Place:</strong> Lyft</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Gay Barhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-gay-bar/BestOf?oid=9014149
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-gay-bar/BestOf?oid=9014149
<img src="https://media1.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014148/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Babe's (Hall of Fame Winner) and Godfrey's</h3>
<p>Babe's<br>
<strong>3166 W. Cary St. <br>
355-9330<br>
facebook.com/babesofcarytown/</strong></p>
<p>Godfrey's<br>
<em>308 E. Grace St. <br>
648-3957<br>
godfreysva.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Barcode</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Club for Dancinghttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-club-for-dancing/BestOf?oid=9014147
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-club-for-dancing/BestOf?oid=9014147
<img src="https://media1.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014146/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Babe's of Carytown</h3>
<p><em>3166 W. Cary St. <br>
355-9330<br>
facebook.com/babesofcarytown/</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Cha Cha's Cantina</p>
<p><strong>Third Place: </strong>Society Social Club<br>
</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Late-night Dininghttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-late-night-dining/BestOf?oid=9014145
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-late-night-dining/BestOf?oid=9014145
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014144/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Galaxy Diner</h3>
<p><em>3109 W. Cary St. <br>
213-0510<br>
facebook.com/Galaxy-Diner-116042665092404/</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Sidewalk Cafe</p>
<p><strong>Third Place: </strong>Uptown Deli</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest dive bar where everyone knows your facehttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-dive-bar-where-everyone-knows-your-face/BestOf?oid=9014143
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-dive-bar-where-everyone-knows-your-face/BestOf?oid=9014143
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014142/best_of_nightlife_bamboo.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>The Bamboo Café</h3>
<p><em>1 S. Mulberry St. <br>
353-1609<br>
bamboocaferva.com</em></p>
<p>We love the Bamboo because it stays the same. Like, since 1974. This little Fan gem is a tried-and-true dive where you can chill with old farts, young farts, salty scooter enthusiasts, retired firemen, real alcoholics, wombats, West Virginia mothmen — the whole gamut of polite and not-so-polite society. Most likely you either know everyone or everyone looks vaguely familiar. The food is good, the conversation is loud, the music could be louder (what happened to cranking the Faces all the time?) Oh hey look, it's Eddie and Chrissie behind the bar, we recognize them from sweet local bands over the years. Awww, and Eddie remembered that we drink the cheapest beer possible. Thanks, Eddie. Now we're going to nod off for a minute from exhaustion, then talk about hairy carnival stars or other news of the weird with Mr. Lee at the bar. Stay gold, Bamboo. </p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Bar, Mechanicsville and the East Endhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-mechanicsville-and-the-east-end/BestOf?oid=9014140
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-mechanicsville-and-the-east-end/BestOf?oid=9014140
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014139/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Kregger's Tap and Table</h3>
<p><em>9523 Kings Charter Drive<br>
299-2176<br>
kreggersrva.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Marty's Grill</p>
<p><strong>Third Place:</strong> Midway Lounge</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Bar, West End to Short Pumphttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-west-end-to-short-pump/BestOf?oid=9014138
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-west-end-to-short-pump/BestOf?oid=9014138
<img src="https://media1.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014137/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Bar Louie</h3>
<p><em>11788 W. Broad St.<br>
440-7301<br>
barlouie.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>Capital Ale House</p>
<p><strong>Third Place: </strong>Beach House</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Bar, South Sidehttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-south-side/BestOf?oid=9014032
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-south-side/BestOf?oid=9014032
<img src="https://media1.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014031/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: O'Toole's (Hall of Fame Winner) and Great American Ranch</h3>
<p>O'Toole's <br>
<em>4800 Forest Hill Ave.<br>
233-1781<br>
otoolesrestaurant.com</em></p>
<p>Great American Ranch<br>
<em>13995 Raised Antler Circle<br>
608-0182<br>
greatamericanranch.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place:</strong> Legend Brewery</p>
<p><strong>Third Place: </strong>South Beach House</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Bar, Downtown to Shockoe Bottomhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-downtown-to-shockoe-bottom/BestOf?oid=9014030
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-downtown-to-shockoe-bottom/BestOf?oid=9014030
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014029/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: Southern Railway Taphouse</h3>
<p><em>100 S. 14th St. <br>
308-8530<br>
srtaphouse.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place:</strong> Sine Irish Pub</p>
<p><strong>Third Place: </strong>Cha Cha's Cantina<br>
</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest venue getawayhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-venue-getaway/BestOf?oid=9014028
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-venue-getaway/BestOf?oid=9014028
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9014026/best_of_nightlife_beacomn.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>Beacon Theatre in Hopewell</h3>
<p><em>401 N. Main St. <br>
446-3457<br>
thebeacontheatreva.com</em></p>
<p>Ever feel like getting out of Richmond for a show, but don't want to deal with the nonstop congestion of interstate traffic on the way back from a Washington venue? Well the little town of Hopewell has more than killer hot dogs. It also has a jewel of a musical theater in the Beacon, designed by Fred Bishop, the same architect who built our glorious Byrd Theatre in Carytown. What began in the 1920s as a vaudeville house featuring performers such as Lash LaRue and Sally Rand, primarily became a movie house from the 1950s to the 1970s, falling into disrepair and sitting for years until the city began restoring it in 2011 to the tune of $4.2 million. With flourishes of colonial revival and art deco style details, the venue has fewer seats and feels more intimate than the National, but it's still got a great sound system and the rare charm of a warm and welcoming small-town staff. Plus there's plenty of free parking. Upcoming shows include: the Del McCoury Band (June 8); Leo Kottke (June 21); the Spinners (July 13); Billy Bob Thornton and the Boxmasters (Aug. 8); and Paul Barrere and Fred Tackett of Little Feat (Aug. 25). <br>
</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Bar, Fanhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-fan/BestOf?oid=9013921
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-fan/BestOf?oid=9013921
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9013920/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: F.W. Sullivan's Fan Bar & Grille</h3>
<p><em>2401 W. Main St. <br>
308-8576<br>
fwsullivans.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place: </strong>District 5</p>
<p><strong>Third Place:</strong> Sticky Rice</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style WeeklyBest Bar, Carytownhttps://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-carytown/BestOf?oid=9013919
https://www.styleweekly.com/richmond/best-bar-carytown/BestOf?oid=9013919
<img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/styleweekly/imager/u/original/9013918/cover21_best_of_horiz.jpg" width="864" height="568" />
<h3>First Place: New York Deli</h3>
<p><em>2920 W. Cary St. <br>
358-3354<br>
ny-d.com</em></p>
<p><strong>Second Place:</strong> Babe's of Carytown</p>
<p><strong>Third Place: </strong>The Jasper</p>
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Tue, 22 May 2018 01:00:00 -0400Style Weekly